Human Rights at the Intersections
Bloomsbury Academic (Verlag)
978-1-350-26870-8 (ISBN)
The contributions in this open access collection examine the “lived realities of human rights” and critically engage with debates on gender, sexuality, localism and cosmopolitanism, weaving insights from multiple disciplines into a broader call for interdisciplinary scholarship informed by practice. Overall, the contributors argue that the power of human rights depends on their ability to be continuously broadened and re-imagined in locales around the world. It is only on this basis that human rights can remain relevant and be effectively used to push local, national and international institutions to put in place structural reforms that advance equity and pluralism in these perilous times.
The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.
Anthony Tirado Chase is a professor at Occidental College, USA, and Chair of its Young Initiative on the Global Political Economy. Pardis Mahdavi is Provost and Executive Vice President of the University of Montana, USA. Hussein "Huss" Banai is an associate professor of International Studies in the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington, USA. Sofia Gruskin is a professor in the Keck School of Medicine and Gould School of Law, and Director USC Institute on Inequalities in Global Health, University of Southern California, USA.
Editor and Contributor Biographies
Acknowledgments
Foreword: Reimagining Human Rights Cesar Rodriguez-Garavito
Introduction: Intersections and Transformations Anthony Tirado Chase, Pardis Mahdavi, and Sofia Gruskin
Section 1: Exploding the Global-Local Binary in “Cosmopolitan” Human Rights
Introduction Anthony Tirado Chase
1. “A Band Aid on a Bullet Wound:” Cosmopolitan Desire in a Pluriversal World Joe Hoover
Snapshot #1: Localism vs Globalism: Authoritarianism’s Battlefield in the Arab Region Bahey eldin Hassan
2. Relishing the Roots: The Promise and Peril of Decentralizing Human Rights Discourse Kristi Heather Kenyon
3. The Future of Human Rights is Local Michael Goodhart
Snapshot #2: Global-Local Intersections to Advance Accountability in Post-conflict Côte d’Ivoire Cristian Correa
4. Human Rights at the Intersections of Structural and Cultural Violence LaDawn Haglund
5. Everyday Cosmopolitanism and Human Rights Huss Banai
6. Who Cares? Exclusion, Empathy and Solidarity Shareen Hertel
Section 2: Human Rights, the City, and “Local” Actors
Introduction Anthony Tirado Chase
1. From Rebels to Rocks: Cities as Anchors in Turbulent Times Gaea Morales
Snapshot #3: Global Human Rights Norms and City Policy in Los Angeles Angela Kim and Erin Bromaghim
2. Resourcing Rights: How Sub-state Actors Can Use Local Fiscal Policy to Counteract Democratic Erosion
Sergio Chaparro Hernandez and Nelson Camilo Sanchez
3. Truth-in-Los Angeles: “Reimagining and Rejuvenating Global Norms at the City Level” Anthony Tirado Chase
Snapshot #4: Racial Justice in Los Angeles: What Can Global Truth-telling Norms Offer? Brenda Shockley
and Zita Davis
4. Localizing International Human Rights Norms through Participatory Video with People Affected by Leprosy in Niger, Nigeria, and Mozambique Yohanna Abdou, ShehuSarkin Fada, Paulo E. Hansine, Jone A. Jose, and William Paul Simmons
5. The Complex Intersection of Legacies of Violence and Legacies of Resistance in Montes de María, Colombia
Pablo Abitbol Pineiro
Section 3: Sexuality, Sexual Rights and Reproductive Rights
Introduction Sofia Gruskin
1. Sex, Sexuality, and Sexual and Reproductive Health: The Role of Human Rights? Rajat Khosla and Kate Gilmore
Snapshot #5: Global-Local Intersections to Change Politics and Public Policy on Sexuality in Brazil Vera Paiva
2. Navigating Homocolonialism in LGBTQ2+ Rights Strategies: Sexual and Political Possibilities beyond the Current Framing of International Queer Rights Momin Rahman and Adnan Hossain
Snapshot #6: Glocalization and Sexual Rights Pascale Allotey
3. Intersex Human Rights in a Time of Instrumentalization and Backlash Morgan Carpenter
4. Eppur si muove. Reflections on Human Rights and Trans Depathologization in ICD-11 Mauro Cabral Grinspan
Section 4: Feminism and the “Triple Bind”
Introduction Pardis Mahdavi
1. Whose Gender Is It? Inclusion versus Exclusion in Global Feminist Movements Lara Stemple
2. What Can Intersectional Approaches Reveal About Violence? Dolores Trevizo
3. Speaking Feminism to Rights: Intersections of Ethos and Praxis Alison Brysk
4. Why Does Sexual Difference Matter in the Legal Paradigm of Equality? Human Rights Violations of Migrant Women in Immigration Detention in Mexico Alethia Fernandez de la Reguera Ahedo
Snapshot #7: Feminism and Its Discontents: A Conversation with Gloria Steinem and Gloria Feldt Pardis Mahdavi
Conclusion: Human Rights in Motion Hussein Banai
Bibliography
Index
Erscheinungsdatum | 16.08.2024 |
---|---|
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Themenwelt | Sozialwissenschaften ► Politik / Verwaltung ► Vergleichende Politikwissenschaften |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-350-26870-4 / 1350268704 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-350-26870-8 / 9781350268708 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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